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Actually you began this discussion with me. So now what?
I remarked to your comment that parables were, in effect, stories. And I pointed out that Biblical parables contain 'real' entities.
There is a marked difference between Biblical parables and parables of the world.
One of the two is a reality. Biblical parables concern real matters.
And that is the essence of what I was pointing to.
IN the 'story' of little red riding hood there is a talking big bad wolf. That's a fantasy story.
IN every Biblical parable there is a hidden character(s) revealed called Satan and devils who are in fact real entities, yet they are unseen. That is why the information about them is conveyed by parable.
And the more interesting part is that these entities are overlayed upon mankind, making the fact of these parables even more interesting.
and to ratchet up the conversation to even more interesting levels, scriptures IN PARABLE present that those entities IN MAN resist exposure when PARABLES are applied to reveal them.
How far ya wanna take the conversation?
We both agreed that it is a parable and that it does not entail hell in the Lake of Fire sense.You believe that Lazarus was sitting on Abraham's lap chit-chatting away with a dead man burning in torment and I do not.
I proposed Jesus' method given for parable analysis in Mark 4. I understand that you won't like it.
Have we really discussed anything yet? I think we did discover that you don't believe there is an eternal Lake of Fire and I consider that a fairly recent apostasy of some good intentioned believers who don't see the benefit of Satan and devils heading there and somehow prefer to either make fun of people like me who believe there are real evil spirits who will factually be put away forever in the Lake of Fire, or they want to 'save' evil spirits via Satanic salvation.So I guess we agree to disagree and go on our way don't we? What else would you like to discuss?
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